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Matthew J. Hefti

Autor(a) de A Hard And Heavy Thing

1 Work 25 Membros 4 Críticas

Obras por Matthew J. Hefti

A Hard And Heavy Thing (2015) 25 exemplares

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This is a very original story. It is well-written and powerful. The scenes in country seemed real and gritty to me (I did not serve). Mr. Hefti let the story unfold and kept me wanting to read right up until the end. The main character is both a hero and an anti-hero and i believe this to be hard to pull off.

I also enjoyed the setting of the Lacrosse area and his Wisconsin bars. His characters seem like real people with real problems that do not get solved easily.
 
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Thomas.Cannon | 3 outras críticas | Dec 7, 2021 |
Another excellent 9/11-genre book following the pre- and post- lives of three best friends and lovers. Explores the emotions and ramifications of societal trauma and angst in the wake of that world-changing day. This book will demand your respect and appreciation for the young men (and women) who reacted, much in the same fashion, I suspect, as Americans did following Pearl Harbor, as well as shining a light on how we accept those that return(ed) from the conflict.
 
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ChetBowers | 3 outras críticas | Mar 10, 2021 |
We all have books that we are reluctant to read, movies we're reluctant to see, or things we're reluctant to do that we know we should tackle. I find that sometimes this is pure laziness but other times it's because I don't expect the experience to be pleasurable; it's a daunting obligation for whatever reason. It's a little like medicine. You take it not because it tastes good but because it will help you get better. I fully expected Matthew J. Hefti's novel, A Hard and Heavy Thing, to be the book equivalent of medicine. I'd be a better person for having read it but it would be a painful experience in the reading. I mean, it's about war and the devastation it wreaks on the lives of soldiers even once they are back in civilian life. And while it was indeed a painful read, it was pretty magnificent too, far and away better than just taking medicine. It made me face unpleasant truths and it made me think. It made me reflect, it made me feel, and it pushed me, as the best books do. Reading about war is never going to be comfortable but it can be so much more than simply edifying and I need to remember that the next time a book with an uncomfortable topic arrives on my list.

Levi and Nick are in high school, drinking and doing drugs, generally wasting their lives in a small Wisconsin town. They have no direction, besides maybe getting Nick's beautiful girlfriend Eris to the ER after an apparent overdose, so when 9/11 happens and Nick suggests that they enlist, Levi agrees easily. If war can be said to go well, theirs does not. They experience so much of what war is: boredom and waiting as well as terror and action, camaraderie and annoyance, power and subordination, life and death, and meaning and nothingness. And once the war is over for them, they each have to return home and find a way to move forward in regular civilian life with the people they love in the small town they thought they'd left behind.

The novel is Levi's book, written to Nick to explain their life and how they reached the place they were in. It's a suicide note, an explanation, the love story of their friendship, an apology, an examination, an unburdening, and a meditation. It is mostly in the third person, with Levi writing about himself and Nick from an outsider's perspective until his authorial voice breaks through and he addresses his audience (ostensibly Nick but also the reader) directly, philosophizing about the action and what it all meant in terms of their relationship, making sure that he was not misunderstood because of the goodness of Nick's heart. It is honest and hard. And although fiction, it feels like nothing so much as truth. Broken into three distinct sections, before, during, and after the war, the novel addresses such huge issues as guilt, suffering, PTSD, love, hope, and hopelessness. Nick and Levi are hard to like much in the beginning, just dumb, bored teenagers wasting their lives. But war changes everything and their essential selves solidify in surprising ways, making them more complex and more sympathetic. Hefti starts the novel with the boys taking Eris to the ER, worried she is dying and the narrative tension slowly escalates from there through Iraq and Afghanistan, and all the way back home as well. This is a powerful story that asks if absolution or redemption is ever available. What if the official take on events is undeserved? What is a normal life, especially after a life changing experience or tragedy? What is a human life worth and who is the judge of that? What is a friendship worth and how many betrayals can it survive? Ultimately thoughtful and heartbreaking, this novel shows us that both war and the heart are hard and heavy things. And Matthew Hefti has allowed the reader a glimpse into both.

A National Reading Group Month Great Group Read for 2016.
… (mais)
 
Assinalado
whitreidtan | 3 outras críticas | Jan 17, 2019 |
A HARD AND HEAVY THING, by Matthew J. Hefti.

Author Hefti, a veteran of both the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, translates those years into some fine fiction in A HARD AND HEAVY THING, his first book. In it he tells the story of Levi and Nick, two high school friends from a small town in Wisconsin, who, following "the attacks" on 9/11, "joined [the army] in a fit of youth." And Eris, the girl they are both in love with, also figures prominently. The story covers a period of nearly ten years, with frequent flashbacks to their childhoods. There are also periodic italicized editorial comments throughout the narrative - explanations from the person writing the book, i.e. Levi, who is a journal keeper, a diarist: a writer. The "hard and heavy thing" of the title is, of course, war, and what it can do, and does do, to the young men and women who fight our wars. And Levi's heartrending and heartfelt story delves deeply into the long-term and far-reaching effects of war on both the participants and their families.

It's not a new subject, obviously. The current wars have spawned a flood of books by veterans, both fiction and non-fiction. Hefti's book brought to mind a few others I have read recently. One is Jesse Goolsby's novel, I'D WALK WITH MY FRIENDS IF I COULD FIND THEM. Another is WAR OF THE ENCYCLOPAEDISTS, co-authored by veteran Gavin Kovite and his friend Christopher Robinson. And there are the memoirs too, like Benjamin Busch's beautifully written, DUST TO DUST, and Brian Turner's MY LIFE AS A FOREIGN COUNTRY, or Brian Castner's THE LONG WALK.

Like many of these authors, Hefti is a product of the creative writing MFA system. And I think he is very much aware of this, and also that he is not the first to write things down, perhaps in an attempt to expiate the nightmares and horrific memories that war bestows on its combatants. The story gets off to a rather slow start, lumbering along at a ponderous pace for the first hundred-plus pages as the characters and their common history are carefully placed in context. But once he gets Levi and Nick into Iraq, moving inexorably toward a pivotal event, Hefti hits his stride and the pages begin to turn faster and faster. And this pace continues, post-Iraq and post-Afghanistan, as Levi's life begins to come apart and he returns to civilian life, broken and confused, wanting to write about what's happened to him, but afraid to, because -

"... anything I finished would suck. It would be too preachy, too maudlin, too heavy, too sentimental. Too self-conscious. Too obviously allegorical. Too cliché ..."

The truth is all of these things are at least partially true. Yes there is some preachiness, some sentimentality, certainly some self-consciousness, and a few of the usual clichés; but it most certainly does NOT "suck." If anything, it soars. Levi's story - and Nick's and Eris's too - has the ring of sincerity and truth not often found in first books of fiction. Matthew J. Hefti has all the makings of a fine writer, and this is a damn good book. Very highly recommended. (four and a half stars)

- Tim Bazzett, author of the Cold War memoir, SOLDIER BOY: AT PLAY IN THE ASA
… (mais)
½
 
Assinalado
TimBazzett | 3 outras críticas | Oct 31, 2015 |

Estatísticas

Obras
1
Membros
25
Popularidade
#508,561
Avaliação
½ 4.5
Críticas
4
ISBN
3